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Lynne Jones’ passionate dedication to working for flood protection for
Keswick was recognised in the latest Queen’s Birthday Honours list by
her being awarded an MBE. She was a founder member of the
Keswick Flood Action Group (KFAG) after the 2005 flood, becoming
Chair in 2012, and throughout these years she has worked to help all
members of the community who have suffered from the effects of
flooding. She is moved by the plight of each and every flood victim. To
quote a local couple, Mr and Mrs Walker: “Lynne has been a tireless
worker on behalf of all of us at Brundholme Gardens who still live with
the fear of being flooded again. She just never gives up, constantly
reminding those in authority of our predicament, and fighting for a
satisfactory solution. I don't know what we would have done without
her courage and determination and when a solution is finally found to
our problems here, as it has to be eventually, it will be Lynne that we
have to thank.”
As well as working on the bigger picture of flood protection, Lynne also picks up on small details. A practical example
was in the aftermath of Storm Desmond when the County Council set up a flood advice centre in Keswick in a coffee
shop attached to a housing complex. Lynne obtained a grant to provide floodees with a free hot drink or bowl of soup
when they attended, so that coming to the centre became almost a social outing during a very stressful time, as people
stayed to chat and offer mutual support.
Although Lynne is the lynch pin of KFAG, she has an inclusive leadership style, keeps everyone fully informed, seeks
opinions and comment at all times, and ensures all issues are properly discussed. But she is indeed the “driving force”
– words repeated time and again. Her extensive knowledge, built up from her own and other people’s flooding
experiences as well as discussion with a range of people (both professional and non-professional) with relevant
practical knowledge, means that she can promote soundly based arguments in discussions with a wide range of
individuals, including MPs and senior officers in local or central government.
It is Lynne’s sensitivity towards the plight of each and every flood victim and the determination, endurance and
persistence she puts into her fight to reduce their problems that made her a deserving candidate for recognition
through the honours system. She has sacrificed an enormous amount of her personal life working for flood protection,
and as another KFAG member puts it: “It is not just an unpaid full-time job but an unpaid full-time job with excessive
amounts of overtime.”
KESWICK FLOOD GROUP MEMBER AWARDED MBE
News and updates January 2018
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£40m extra funding to better protect thousands of homes against flooding
Extra funding will better protect more than 7,000 properties, including over
5,000 homes. Press Release 20th July 2018 Thousands of properties across England will be better protected against the threat of
flooding thanks to a multi-million-pound investment by the government, Environment
Minister Thérèse Coffey confirmed today (Friday 20 July).
Across the country 13 flood schemes will benefit from £40 million of additional funding
which will unlock flood defence schemes and help support economic growth and
regeneration in areas that have suffered from flooding in recent years.
The additional funding, first announced in the budget, adds to millions of pounds of government grant-in-aid already allocated to
these projects and partnership funding already secured. It will help leverage an additional £24 million from other sources, enabling
the flood schemes to go ahead. In total, more than 7,000 properties will be better protected against flooding, including over 5,000
homes. This additional money is part of our £2.6 billion investment from 2015 to 2021 to fund 1,500 flood defence schemes which
will better protect 300,000 homes across the country.
Environment Minister Thérèse Coffey said:
This extra funding for flood defences will unlock schemes that will better protect thousands of homes and businesses against
flooding, supporting regeneration in important towns and villages in the north and coastal communities.
It will boost our resilience as a nation and help our communities to grow and prosper.
In the historic English Channel tourist town of Weymouth, £1.2 million will improve the harbour wall, reducing flood risk to 450
properties and helping to kick start the regeneration of Weymouth town centre.
More than £10 million is also being awarded to a scheme to protect deprived communities in the St. Austell Bay area of Cornwall.
The funding will unlock an additional £4.8 million of partnership funding contributions and is additional to £13.4 million of grant-
in-aid which has already been allocated to the scheme. The funds will support an integrated regeneration partnership project,
which will help to reduce flood risk and develop plans for new housing and community green space.
Five flood schemes in the north of England will receive almost half of the total funding - £17.4 million- in a boost to the Northern
Powerhouse. Rochdale in Greater Manchester will receive a total of £5 million to develop one of the largest inland flood schemes
in the region. The defences in Rochdale will increase the level of flood protection to 1,000 residential properties as well as critical
infrastructure such as the tram network, a bus station, a grid sub-station and a waste water treatment works.
Eight miles to the west, £7 million has been awarded for new flood defence work around the River Irwell in Bury and Radcliffe as a
first step towards the development of a new £46 million flood defence scheme, better protecting 870 properties. In addition to
raising flood defences at key locations along the river’s edge another key aspect of the scheme will be the creation of a wildlife
habitat and amenity areas for the public by setting defences further back from the river.
The new funding for flood defences in the north of England adds to the £3.4 billion already invested into the Northern Powerhouse
to build a more prosperous and inclusive economy where everybody has the opportunity to reach their full potential.
See the full press release here
GOOD NEWS FOR THE NORTH WEST
https://www.gov.uk/government/news/40m-extra-funding-to-better-protect-thousands-of-homes-against-flooding
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Some of our National Flood Forum staff are doing a sponsored walk along the River
Severn, 30 kilometres in length to raise funds for us.
Please sponsor them to keep the NFF working with flooded communities helping them with much needed advice, guidance and
support.
The National Flood Forum’s work does not always feature dramatic scenes of recovery; the ongoing support of people who have
flooded is just as important – flooding takes on average six to eighteen months for people to rebuild their wrecked lives. Our staff
work in the background supporting people who have been flooded, whether it’s on our helpline or through our project officers
who are working tirelessly with those communities who have been flooded out of their homes and are desperate to ensure that
they don’t flood again. We also help support people through the distress and trauma of the aftermath of flooding; Dealing with the
reinstatement issues that people face while their homes are being restored. We try and steer people along a path to help them
make their homes stronger against flooding. Through our advice helpline we guide people though the broad myriad of issues and
questions that are associated with flooding
PLEASE CLICK HERE TO SPONSOR US
National Flood Forum Walk-A-Thon
http://www.gofundme.com/national-flood-forum-walkathon
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What we do and how we can help
Flooding of your house, business premises or farm yard can be devastating. Whilst it is not possible to completely
eliminate the risk of flooding, there are things which can be done to lessen its dire effects.
1) Slowing the Flow to reduce flood peaks
Small works carried out at a small cost are being constructed by the Shropshire Wildlife Trust on our behalf in the
upper catchments of the River Corve and its tributaries and these will, by temporarily storing flood water, reduce the
peak flood flows downstream.
Such works can include leaky dams, off course storage, hedge and tree planting, reduction of cattle poaching, aeration
of soils so that they can absorb more water and so on. Apart from their prime purpose in flow reduction, such works
can also result in improved farmlands with higher productivity.
These installations may sound so small as to be ineffective but when they are inserted in large numbers – 130 leaky
dams below Wilderhope for example – they have a cumulative effect. Although such techniques – collectively known as
Natural Flood Management – are quite new, such data as has been collected to date indicate that flood peaks can be
reduced by around 10%. This can translate to a local flood peak level being reduced by say 3 or 4 inches and that could
make the difference between your property being flooded or not.
None of this work could be carried out without the permission of the land owners.
2) Clearing the watercourses
Before clearance After clearance
DIDDLEBURY FLOOD ACTION GROUP
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Below a certain point in the catchment of each tributary, it becomes futile to build items such as leaky dams as by then,
flood flows would wash them away. As streams enter built up areas therefore, a different approach is adopted
whereby the existing watercourses are kept in such a condition that they can cope with as large a flood flow as
possible. This means firstly keeping them clear of rubbish – both the stream beds and any associated culverts, drains
and bridges. The stream beds and banks should be maintained by removing any build-up of silt in the beds and also
taking back any banks encroaching into the stream bed – both by silt build up and excessive weed growth – so as to
maintain the full stream width. Streams work best when they are straight so small kinks should if possible be
straightened out. Such work will maximise the flow capacity of the watercourses. The FAG arranges regular working
parties of volunteers to carry out all this maintenance work.
Better this… than this
3) Self help
Air brick covers Flood gates and waterproof rendering
If, despite all the above, water overspills stream banks and flooding results, the onus is on the property owners to
protect their properties. The Shropshire Council will on request send out a survey team to assess your property and
make recommendations on how best to protect it. Grants are available for some items such as flood gates and
waterproof rendering and sand bags are generally available locally on request to the Shropshire Council. There are
depth gauges installed on the Diddlebury and Culmington Bridges and when flow levels reach a pre-set alarm level, a
message is sent out to the local FAG. If the flow continues to rise and triggers a second higher alarm level (which has
been set at a level known by experience to cause flooding), a further message is sent and the FAG can alert those
vulnerable properties identified on their Flood Resilience Plan to give them time to erect their defences.
4) Insurance
If you live in a house that has previously flooded or that is shown to be within flood risk areas on the EA mapping, your
Insurance Company may decline Cover or set a very high Premium. The Government has set up a flood insurance
scheme called Flood Re which will offer reasonably priced cover to such properties. Details are available from the FAG.
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5) Permissions
All the smaller tributaries of the River Corve – the Diddle Brook, Seifton Brook, Pye Brook etc are what is known as
Ordinary Watercourses and come within the jurisdiction of the Shropshire Council. The Corve itself and some of the
lower parts of the tributaries are known as Main Rivers and come within the jurisdiction of the EA. The work of the
FAG’s falls mostly within Ordinary Watercourses and hence permissions are needed from the Shropshire Council before
any works in the stream beds are carried out. Each such permission is called an Ordinary Watercourse Consent (OWC)
and lasts for 3 years. The FAG can give advice on this aspect and information is also available on Shropshire Council’s
website; http://shropshire.gov.uk/drainage-and-flooding/development-responsibility-and-maintenance/new-
development-and-watercourse-consenting/ordinary-watercourses-applying-for-consent-for-works
6) Assistance
The FAG receives much help, encouragement and support from several different organisations including:
• Diddlebury Parish Council
• Shropshire Wildlife Trust
• National Flood Forum
• Shropshire Council
• Environment Agency
• Severn Trent Water
• The local farming community
• Local land owners
Without this support, we could not function.
There exists an embryo Corvedale Forum which will eventually link up all the existing and future FAG’s in the Corvedale
to enable them to share common problems and solutions.
7) Contact us
We have a dedicated page in the Diddlebury Parish Web Site at: http://www.diddleburyparish.co.uk/flood-action-
group
This is kept up to date with news on events, progress reports, requests for volunteers and so on.
There are also frequent articles in the Corvedale News.
I can be contacted at: [email protected]
Geoff Neden
2018
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Austrey is a village in North Warwickshire which suffers from surface water flooding which is enhanced by a poor and
aging drainage system. The Flood Action Group has created partnerships through hosting Multi-Agency Meetings and
together with these agencies have been working hard to rectify flooding issues in the village. The village faces
pressures of increased development, M42 runoff, and the proposed route of HS2.
In July, Austrey Flood Action Group hosted a meeting with HS2 to highlight their flooding concerns and to start
discussions around the proposed designs. The meeting opened with a presentation from the group on the history of
flooding in Austrey and their concerns on how HS2 may exacerbate the surface water flooding. A secondary
presentation by AECOM/HS2 highlighted the draft proposals for the stretch of railway close to Austrey. In the following
discussions, the group portrayed how useful regularly community engagement and communication are when
undertaking schemes that could have an effect on a village, town or city. This would involve engineers and consultants
learning the flooding history, flow patterns, and previous/present works undertaken. They were pleased to learn that
HS2/AECOM completely understand this and will be keen to be involved with the Multi-Agency approach the group
works on.
This meeting is a powerful reminder of how important community engagement on a multi-agency scale is and how
Flood Action Groups taking initiative can turn what was once seen as another issue into possible remediation or
betterment.
Austrey and HS2 meeting
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Several flood related policy documents have recently been published:
The England Flood and Coastal Erosion Risk Management Strategy Review is underway, led by the Environment
Agency. This is the main strategic document for how flood risk will be managed in the coming years in England, so it
needs to be really ambitious and wide ranging, with clear goals to aim for. Several Flood Action Groups helped to
scope the work before Christmas and we are hoping that there will be opportunities to shape the strategy before the
consultation towards the end of 2018. More information to follow but please let us know if you would like to be
involved. The National Flood Forum has Trustees and staff on several of the working groups and a number of people
from Flood Action Groups are also involved.
The Strategy will then be finalised in 2019 as part of the 25 Year Environment Plan.
The updated Flood Re Transition Plan sets out how Flood Re (the insurance mechanism to help residents access
affordable flood risk cover for property insurance) will contribute to:
• Limiting the risks of flooding;
• Reducing the damage caused by and costs associated with flooding; and
• Ensuring that an effective market for household insurance exists.
An action plan details how this might be achieved.
The National Infrastructure Commission has produced a National Infrastructure Assessment with some significant
recommendations for managing water, including:
The Commission recommends that government should set out a strategy to deliver a nationwide standard of resilience
to flooding with an annual likelihood of 0.5 per cent by 2050 where this is feasible. A higher standard of 0.1 per cent
should be provided for densely populated areas where the costs per household are lower.
We would welcome your views.
The National Adaptation Programme and the Third Strategy for Climate Adaptation Reporting has just been published
by Government. It includes a series of Government led flood risk related commitments that will be reported against to
Parliament by the Committee for Climate Change.
BULLETIN POLICY UPDATE
https://www.floodre.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/Flood_Transition2018_AW.pdfhttps://www.nic.org.uk/publications/national-infrastructure-assessment-2018/The%20National%20Adaptation%20Programme%20and%20the%20Third%20Strategy%20for%20Climate%20Adaptation%20Reporting
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If you are one of our affiliated Flood Action Groups, have there
been any changes in contact details? We would love to get an
update from you with any news or activities from your Group.
Drop Jean a line here at the Bewdley office
GIVE US AN UPDATE ……..
FORTHCOMING EVENTS IN 2018
12th & 13th September
NEC, Birmingham
19th & 20th September
Hall 5, NEC, Birmingham,
mailto:[email protected]